Quote from TheMagican:
Thanks for your clarificantion.I see what you mean.Honestly, i never thought about it,but i can say,that the EXPECTANCY of my model may vary and i can`t say beforehand what it would be.But in majority of the cases,i can say, it`s something around 100%,or higher.
But what is the use of it anyway?It`s not a good idea to artificially maintain the expectancy within the framework of a certain percentage.What if an expectancy for the next trade would be 99%(rough example)?You won`t take this trade?
Well, the expectancy of EVERY model varies. You still seem to be missing the point. A trader doesn't artificially maintain the expectancy within a framework. The trader always tries for peak profitability (which is a function of expectancy, size, and turnover), but he should have some type of minimum expectancy rule. At the very least, the trader should know that a trade offers at least a slight positive expectancy, otherwise he is really just guessing.
I can almost guarantee that your gross expectancy (i.e. under all market conditions) isn't even close to 100% or you wouldn't be claiming to be under-capitalized. Another quick way to tell, is to calculate your beta and alpha. If your beta isn't zero with very high alpha, then your expectancy probably isn't even above 10%. But the point still is that you don't even have any idea what it is.
